NORTH AMERICAN FUNGI. 



T hue men, VON Felix. 



589. Fungorum Americanorum triginta species 

 novae. Flora, LXI. (XXXVI. newser.) 177-184. 

 21 April, 1878. 



Descriptions of one new genus, Thuemenia, and 28 new 

 species collected principally by H. W. Ravenel in South 

 Carolina. One species is credited to Rehm and one to Cooke. 



ijg O> pie pilze des weinstockes. Mono 



graphische bearbeitung der sammtlichen bisher 

 bekannten, auf den arten der gattung Vitis, L., 

 vorkomraenden pilze. 8. pp. xx. 225. PI. 5. 

 Vienna. 1878. 



Includes descriptions of American viticolous fungi, several 

 species described as new. New species of this work are 

 repeated in Ifedicigia, XVIII. 118-124. Rev. in Grev. VI. 

 147, and Bot. Zeit. XXXVII. 60. 



591. ffyphomycetes nonnulli novi Ameri- 



cani. Rev. Myc. I. 58-61. April, 1879. 



Descriptions of 13 species collected by H. W. Ravenel. 



592. Melampsora salicina, der weiden 



rost. Hedwigia, XVIII. 76-79. May, 1879. 

 Extr. MittheiL aus dem, forstl. Vcrsuchswesen 

 Oesterreichs. II. 



Original not seen. Seven species made of the original 

 sp*ecies, 4 of which belong to the United States. See also 

 Rev. Myc. 1. 136. 



593. A brief contribution to the myco- 



logical flora of the United States. Torr. Bull. 

 VI. 350, 351. Oct. 1879. 



Notes on 8 species, of which 2 are described as new. 



594. Fungi pomicoli. Monographische 



beschreibung der auf den obstfriichten der ge- 

 massigten climata vorkommenden pilze. 8. pp. 

 xii. 143. PL 3. Vienna. 1879. 



Includes descriptions of American species. 



595. Die blasenrost-pilze der Coniferen. 



Monographic der gattung Peridermium, Lev. 

 MittheiL aus dem forstl. Versuchswesen Oester- 

 reichs. II. part 3, pp. 297-323. 4. Vienna. 1880. 



Includes descriptions of and comments on American species 

 of the genus. 



596. Two undescribed North American 



species of Septoria. Bot. Gaz. V. 122-123. 

 Oct. 1880. 



Characters of S. Albaniensis and S. querceti. 



Torrcy Botanical Club. See BULLETIN of. 



Torrey, John. New York, 15 August, 1796. 

 fNew York, 10 March, 1873. 



597. A catalogue of plants growing spontaneously 

 within thirty miles of the city of New York. 8. 

 pp. 100. Albany. 1819. 



On pp. 87-89 is a list of 92 fungi arranged according to 

 Persoon, specific authorities not given. 



598. Catalogue of North American genera 



of plants, arranged according to the orders of 

 Lindley's Introduction to the natural system of 

 botany ; with the number of species belonging to 

 each genus as far as they are at present deter- 

 mined. 8. pp. 22. New York. 1831. 



This was originally printed as an appendix to the Amerr 

 can edition of Lindley's Introduction. Fungi are given on 

 pp. 12, 13. The names of genera only given with the number 

 of supposed species of each genus, in all 3101. 



Trelease, William. Mt. Vernon, N. Y., 22 Feb. 



1857. 



599. Notes on the relations of two Cecidomyians 

 to fungi. Psyche, IV. 195-200. August, 1884. 



Account of Rhytisma Solidaginix, Schw., R. bifrons, 

 Schw., and R. Asteris, Schw., which, author thinks, are 

 probably primarily insect-galls. 



600. The Philadelphia rose rot. Gard. 



Monthly, pp. 211, 212, with figure. July, 1884. 



An account of Peronospora sparsa, and the means for 

 destroying it. 



601. The onion mold. First Ann. Rept. 



Wisconsin Agr. Exp. Station for 1883. pp. 38- 

 44. Fig. 1-5. Madison, 1884. 



An account of Peronospora Sc/ileideniana, DC Bary, 

 with notes on its occurrence in Wisconsin. 



602. The apple-scab and leaf-blight. 



(Fusicladium dendriticum, Wallroth). first 

 Ann. Rept. Wisconsin Agr. Exp. Station for 1883. 

 pp. 45-56. Fig. 6-9. Madison. 1884. 



Account of the fungus and details of the ravages caused by 

 it in Wisconsin. See 434*. 



603. Preliminary list of the parasitic 



fungi of Wisconsin. Trans. Wisconsin Acad. 

 Sci. Arts, VI. 106-144 (1-40). 1886. 



An enumeration of 271 species, with hosts, localities, and 

 critical notes, including descriptions of 16 new species, ore of 

 them credited to Peck and one to Farlow, followed by a host- 

 index. New species given in Jour. Myc. I. 13-15. The 

 reprint was issued early in Nov. 1884, the volume of trans- 

 actions in July, 1886. 



604. The spot disease of strawberry leaves 



(Ramularia Tulasnei, Sacc.) Second Ann. Rept. 

 Wisconsin Agr. Exp. Station for 1884. pp. 47- 

 58. Fig. 1-3. Madison. 1885. 



Account of the fungus and its distribution in Wisconsin. 



605. Heteroecismal Uredincac. Jour. 



Myc. I. 25, 26. Feb. 1885. 



A summary of 29 species. 



606. The genus Cintractia. Torr. Bull. 



XII. 69, 70. PI. 50. July, 1885. 



Account of the structure of Ustilago Junci, Schw., which 

 is referred to the genus Cintractia of Cornu. 



607. The wax-bean fungus. Cultivator 



and Country Gentleman, p. 800. Fig. 1. Oct. 1885. 



Account, with figures, of Gloeosporium Lindemuthianum. 



608. The grape-rot. Trans. Miss. Valley 



Hort. Soc. II. 223-227. Also in Trans. Wisconsin 

 State Hort. Soc. XV. 190-198, with addition of 

 fig. 1-9. 



Includes notices of Peronospora viticola and Phoma itri- 

 cola, with figures. The pagination of reprint from Wia. 

 Trans, is changed a little from original. 



609. The smut of Timothy. Rept. U. S. 



Dept. Agr. for 1885. pp. 87, 88. PL 18. Wash- 

 ington. 1886. 



An account of Tilletia striafformis, Westd., with notes on 

 some Ustilagineae which may prove injurious to cattle. See 

 434>. 



610. A yellow opium mould (Eurotium 



Aspergillus-glaucus'). Contrib. Dept. Pharmacy, 

 Univ. of Wisconsin. No. 2. pp. 5-9. Fig. 1-8. 

 1886. Reprint without pagination. 



Notes on Eurotium Aspergillus-glaucus. 

 Treviranus, Ludolf Christian. Bremen, 18 

 Sept. 1779. fBonn, 6 May, 1864. 



6xx. Ueber die Pietra Fungaja und ein ver- 

 wandtes gebilde aus den Vereinigten Staaten. 

 Verhandl. Naturhistor. Verein der prcuss, Rhein. 

 und Westphal. VI. 281-289. PL 12. 1849. 



Includes an account, with figure, of what is apparently a 

 monstrosity ol some Polyporus, collected by Lieut. Macomb 

 at Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Michigan. 



Tnckerman, Edward. Boston, 7 Dec. 1817. 

 fAmherst, Mass., 15 March, 1886. See FRIES, E. M. 



and Frost, C. C. 



612. A catalogue of plants growing without cul- 

 tivation within thirty miles of Amherst College. 8. 

 pp. vi. 98. Amherst, 1875. 



The fungi by Frost, pp. 62-97, nclude a list of over 1100 

 species, with habitats. In the determination of the species 

 the author was aided hv M. A. Curtis, and some of the names 

 represent species published later in Berkeley's Notices of 

 North American Fungi (see title 42), and some are manu- 

 script names of Curtis and Frost, which were never published. 

 A number of species are referred to C. IT. Peck, and pub- 

 lished by him elsewhere. See PECK. C. H. The names in 

 this catalogue are frequently misspelled. 



